Minolta Minolta MN67Z 20MP FHD Wi-Fi Bridge Camera with Review

The Minolta MN67Z offers a massive 67x zoom for under $400, but you'll sacrifice speed, video quality, and build to get it. It's a very niche pick.

Type Bridge
Sensor 21.1MP
Burst FPS 5 fps
Video 1080p
IBIS No
Weather Sealed No
Weight 622 g
Minolta Minolta MN67Z 20MP FHD Wi-Fi Bridge Camera with camera
35.9 Score global

Overview

The Minolta MN67Z is a bridge camera that tries to do a lot for under $400. It packs a massive 67x optical zoom and a 20MP sensor into a body that's ready to go right out of the box.

It's clearly aimed at someone who wants a point-and-shoot experience with super-telephoto reach. You're getting a lot of lens for your money, but you're making some serious trade-offs to get there.

Performance

That 67x zoom is the main event, and it's genuinely useful for distant subjects. The 20MP sensor is decent, landing in the 66th percentile, so your stills can look good. Everything else is pretty average or below. The autofocus is sluggish (45th percentile), burst shooting is a slow 5fps, and video tops out at basic 1080p. There's no stabilization, so shooting at full zoom is a shaky affair.

Performance Percentiles

AF 44
EVF 41.3
Build 58
Burst 34.8
Video 29.3
Sensor 55.1
Battery 49.7
Display 96.1
Connectivity 76.5
Social Proof 58.4
Stabilization 40

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Strong connectivity (79th percentile) 96th
  • Strong sensor (66th percentile) 77th

Cons

  • Below average build (10th percentile) 29th

Specifications

Full Specifications

Sensor

Type 1/2.3"-Type CMOS
Megapixels 21.14

Shooting

Burst (Mechanical) 5
Max Shutter 1/2000

Video

Max Resolution 1080p

Display & EVF

Screen Size 3
Touchscreen Yes
Articulating Yes

Build

Weight 0.6 kg / 1.4 lbs

Connectivity

Wi-Fi Yes
Bluetooth No
USB USB-2.0
Hot Shoe No

Value & Pricing

At $399, it's a tough sell. You're paying for that giant zoom lens first and foremost. If your number one goal is to photograph birds or sports from a distance on a tight budget, it gets you there. But for anything else—general photography, video, or low-light work—you're better off putting that money toward an older used mirrorless camera.

$399

vs Competition

Stack it up against its real competitors, and the weaknesses show. A used Sony a6000 or Canon M50 with a kit lens will run you about the same. Those cameras have much better sensors, faster autofocus, and the ability to swap lenses later. The MN67Z only wins if you absolutely need that 67x reach right now and can't spend more. Even the Nikon Z30, while more expensive, is in a completely different league for video and image quality.

Spec Minolta Minolta MN67Z 20MP FHD Wi-Fi Bridge Camera with Nikon Z9 Nikon Z 9 FX-Format Mirrorless Camera Body Sony Alpha 7 Sony a7 IV Mirrorless Camera with 28-70mm Canon EOS R6 Canon EOS R6 Mark II Body OM System OM-1 OM SYSTEM OM-1 Mark II Mirrorless Camera Fujifilm X-H2 Fujifilm X-H2 Mirrorless Camera, Black
Type Bridge Mirrorless Mirrorless Mirrorless Mirrorless Mirrorless
Sensor 21.1MP 45.7MP Full Frame 33MP Full Frame 24.2MP Full Frame 22.9MP Micro Four Thirds 40.2MP APS-C
AF Points - - 759 1000 1053 -
Burst FPS 5 30 10 40 120 20
Video 1080p 8K 4K 4K 4K 8K
IBIS false true true true true true
Weather Sealed false true true true true true
Weight (g) 622 1338 658 590 62 590

Verdict

Buy this only if you're a beginner who needs an extreme telephoto lens on a strict budget and don't care about video or low-light performance. For everyone else, a used entry-level mirrorless camera is a smarter long-term investment that won't feel outdated in a year.